Pathophysiology
- In asymptomatic patients 20% of those <60 years of age & 36% of those >60 years of age have evidence of a herniated disc on MRI
- 2 factors required to induce radiculopathy:
- Mechanical compression of nerve root is primary pathogenic factor
- Nerve root needs also to be sensitized by bioactive molecules in order to be mechanically susceptible; mechanical compression alone is not enough
- Bioactive molecules arise from extruded nucleus pulposus, & include interleukins & other inflammatory factors such as TNF-α
Epidemiology & Natural History
- Risk factors:
- Ages of 45 to 64 years
- Sedentary lifestyle
- Frequent driving
- Chronic cough
- Pregnancy
- Smoking
- Frequent lifting of heavy objects
- With activity modification & rest alone:
- 80% of patients have major improvements after 6 weeks
- 90% of patients have major improvements after 3 months
- 93% of patients have major improvements after 6 months
- Majority of disc herniations diminish in size over time; 80% decreasing by >50%
- Stable motor deficits (excluding those with cauda equina syndrome):
- 45% of patients have improvement with non-operative treatment
- 53% have improvement after surgery
Management
- Non-operative:
- Indications
- Absence of a progressive neurologic deficit
- Absence of cauda equina syndrome
- Medications
- NSAIDs
- Corticosteroids
- Muscle relaxants
- Opioids
- Antiepileptics (e.g. gabapentin)
- Tricyclic antidepressants (e.g. amitriptyline)
- Physiotherapy
- Important to limit bed rest to a short term only & resume ADLs as soon as possible
- Active stretching/mobilisation & lumbar stabilisation exercises
- Bracing with lumbar supports
- TENS
- Epidural steroid injections
- Transient decrease in symptoms but generally have no sustained benefits in terms of analgesia, function, or avoidance of surgery
- Fluoroscopic guided caudal, dorsal laminar or transforaminal approaches
- Indications
- Operative:
- Neurological variables
- Indicated for progressive neurologic deficit & in cauda equina syndrome, in which urgent decompression provides the best functional improvement
- Anatomic features of herniation
- Size of disc herniation correlates poorly with pain & eventual need for surgical intervention
- Massive annular defects have highest rate of reherniation
- Variations in surgical technique
- Too little removal may lead to increased recurrence
- Too much removal raises concerns about accelerated disc degeneration & increased back pain
- Patient factors adversely affecting surgical outcome
- Most useful measure of a given operation’s success is whether patient perceives it to be successful, regardless of what surgeon-determined outcomes may demonstrate
- Smoking
- BMI
- Depression
- Frequent headaches
- Low educational level
- Work & disability status
- Legal status
- Compensation status
- Medical comorbidities affecting surgical outcome
- Presence of >4 significantly & independently lowers improvement at 1 year post-operatively
- Operative compared with non-operative management
- Patients treated with surgery have a significantly better result at 1 year postoperatively
- At 4 years postoperatively, surgically treated patients have a trend toward better results
- No difference is observed at 10 years
- However, surgically treated patients have far fewer relapses than the non-operatively treated group in the 1st 4 years
- Motor weakness improves equally in both groups, as does sensory dysfunction
- Overview
- Regardless of treatment, lumbar disc herniations usually have a favourable natural history with improvement over time, but it may take 1 to 2 years for functional improvement to plateau
- In absence of a cauda equina syndrome or progressive weakness, best indication for surgical management is refractory radicular pain
- Neurological variables